Hi all,
FWIW I've tried submitting Weekly Squeak articles to Slashdot a number of times without success. Other times articles topics I wrote about but didn't submit got accepted after being submitted by others, (OLPC related). I regularly submit to reddit, and that has worked well. I just signed up for digg to help a story someone suggested needed digging but find I don't have much time to go through many aggregators. (I'm not even really sure how digg works, but I like reddit)
If I don't get down voted on reddit it usually brings in 3-4 hundred hits, and for really good or interesting articles it can easily bring in >5 hundred. Once reddit pushes us into the top blogs on wordpress, we usually get a few hundred more hits.
There are definitely a group of Smalltalk skeptics. It seems odd to me that the most hostile Smalltalk critics are Haskell and Lisp programmers. Seems odd, like yelling at your own family! I certainly don't have anything against Haskell or Lisp, so I usually do not respond.
Thank you again to our new Weekly Squeak contributors, Michael Davies and Brad Fuller. The new articles were responsible for increasing our hits for Sept to 14,474 (from around 10K in July and August). The articles are really great, thank you!
We had a total of 9 articles posted in September.
Our best day was 1398 hits.
Our top article was: http://news.squeak.org/2007/09/21/qwaq-intel-collaborate-on-enhanced-virtual -workspace-product/ which had 1500 hits.
If you would like to volunteer to help the Weekly Squeak please let me know. This is a great way to help your Squeak community.
Thanks,
Ron Teitelbaum Squeak News Team Leader
-----Original Message----- From: Randal L. Schwartz
"CHRIS" == CHRIS CUNNINGTON cunnington@sympatico.ca writes:
CHRIS> My impression of this is that the editors did not know what to do with CHRIS> the story and so left it in the Firehose section to see what kind of CHRIS> reaction the story had on the Slashdot forums. There was not a great CHRIS> deal of forum activity for the story, and so I think they took that as CHRIS> an indication that they could pass the story over.
I wouldn't worry so much about the slashdot crowd. They're mostly in an echo chamber these days. What would be interesting is to see how Digg'ed you can get for this story. The Cool Kids are reading Digg (and Reddit too, but to a lesser extent).
-- Randal L. Schwartz